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WWPX-TV

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Television station in Martinsburg, West Virginia

WWPX-TV
CityMartinsburg, West Virginia
Channels
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WPXW-TV,WMAR-TV
History
FoundedMay 21, 1990
First air date
October 1, 1991 (1991-10-01)
Former call signs
  • WYVN (1991–1996)
  • WSHE-TV (1996–1998)
Former channel numbers
  • Analog: 60 (UHF, 1991–2009)
  • Digital: 12 (VHF, 2000–2020)
Call sign meaning
West Virginia's Pax; satellite ofWPXW-TV
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID23264
ERP4.2kW
HAAT327.5 m (1,074 ft)
Transmitter coordinates39°14′21″N77°46′16″W / 39.23917°N 77.77111°W /39.23917; -77.77111
Links
Public license information
Websiteiontelevision.com

WWPX-TV (channel 60) is atelevision station licensed toMartinsburg, West Virginia, United States, broadcasting theIon Television network to the northwestern portion of theWashington, D.C.,television market.[2]Owned and operated byIon Media, the station maintains transmitter facilities onBlue Ridge Mountain east ofCharles Town, West Virginia.

WWPX-TV operates as a full-timesatellite of the main Ion station for the Washington area,Manassas, Virginia–licensedWPXW-TV (channel 66), whose offices are located inFairfax Station, Virginia. WWPX covers areas ofWest Virginia's Eastern Panhandle, northernVirginia, centralMaryland and south-centralPennsylvania that receive a marginal to non-existentover-the-air signal from WPXW, although there is significant overlap between the two stations'contours otherwise. WWPX is a straightsimulcast of WPXW; on-air references to WWPX are limited toFederal Communications Commission (FCC)-mandated hourlystation identifications during programming. Aside from the transmitter, WWPX does not maintain any physical presence locally in Martinsburg.

History

[edit]

Channel 60 signed on October 1, 1991, as WYVN ("Your Valley News"), with studios located in a renovated barn on Discovery Place in Martinsburg. WYVN was the secondFox affiliate in West Virginia, behindCharleston'sWVAH-TV (now aCatchy Comedy affiliate). Unusually for Fox stations in the network's early years, WYVN made a commitment from the beginning to local news and public affairs programming.[3] However, owner Flying A Communications found itself in financial trouble due to the cost of the local news operation and poor ratings from competition with Washington, D.C.–based stations. Flying A Communications filed for bankruptcy in October 1992, and the station suspended newscasts in May 1993.[4]

WYVN was forced off the air when Flying A went intoreceivership on September 17, 1993. A sale toWUSQ-FM owner Benchmark Communications, who would have converted the station toCBS affiliate WUSQ-TV, was worked out and approved by the station's bankruptcy trustee, but fell through at the last minute; the license was instead sold to Green River Broadcasting, who returned the station to air on September 24 while it worked out a financing plan.[5][6] Having lost its Fox affiliation, WYVN soldiered on as anindependent, and briefly attempted a return of local news from January through February 1994.[7][8] The station remained unable to emerge from bankruptcy; the studio and equipment were sold to its creditors on April 1, 1994, and they locked out the staff and suspended broadcasting.[6]Paxson Communications acquired the license out of bankruptcy for $1.9 million in late 1994.[9]

The station returned again on September 1, 1996, as WSHE-TV, a Paxson station that aired the company's standardinfomercial format, withreligious programming in some dayparts. The change was made as a clean break with the troubled history of WYVN, but also to "park" a heritage call sign that Paxson had recently removed from one of its FM stations in Miami (nowWMIB).[10] The station changed its call letters to WWPX at the beginning of 1998 and became a charter member of Pax TV along with most of Paxson's other stations on August 31 of that year. It has remained with the network, later known as i: Independent Television and now known as Ion Television, ever since.

WWPX was originally a full affiliate of Pax. In 2002, it converted to a satellite of WPXW. The station could no longer afford its own staff of five master-control operators, and becoming a satellite allowed it to carry only the legal minimum of one manager and one engineer.[11]

Technical information

[edit]

Subchannels

[edit]
Subchannels of WPXW-TV[12] and WWPX-TV[13]
ChannelRes.AspectShort nameProgramming
WPXW-TVWWPX-TV
66.160.1720p16:9IONIon Television
66.260.2BounceBounce TV
66.360.3480iCourtTVCourt TV
66.460.4LaffLaff
66.560.5IONPlusIon Plus
66.660.6BustedBusted
66.760.7GameShoGame Show Central
66.860.8HSNHSN

Analog-to-digital conversion

[edit]

WWPX-TV shut down its analog signal, overUHF channel 60, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United Statestransitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transitionVHF channel 12, usingvirtual channel 60.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for WWPX-TV".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^Hughes, Dave."Washington DC/Baltimore Area TV Stations". dcrtv.com. Archived fromthe original on May 19, 2006. RetrievedMay 21, 2006.
  3. ^"Martinsburg gets new TV station".Frederick News-Post. Associated Press. October 2, 1991. p. D-7.
  4. ^"W.Va. Judge Approves Sale of TV Station to Kentucky Company".Associated Press News. October 11, 1993.
  5. ^"Trustee recommends WYVN-TV sale".Frederick News-Post. Associated Press. September 2, 1993. p. B-2.
  6. ^ab"Lights out at Martinsburg, W. Va., TV station".Frederick News-Post. Associated Press. April 6, 1994. p. B-7.
  7. ^"WWPX-TV Facility Data".FCCData.
  8. ^"West Virginia Station Suspends News Programming".Associated Press News. February 16, 1994.
  9. ^"TV station purchased".Cumberland Times-News. Associated Press. November 29, 1994. p. 2B. RetrievedJune 17, 2020.
  10. ^Foreman, David (March 13, 1997)."inTV Now On TV".The Winchester Star. pp. C1,C3. RetrievedFebruary 1, 2021.
  11. ^Greene, Julie (February 1, 2002)."Financial woes hit area TV stations".Hagerstown Herald-Mail. Archived fromthe original on April 26, 2018. RetrievedApril 25, 2018.
  12. ^"TV query for WPXW-TV".RabbitEars.Archived from the original on August 21, 2017. RetrievedAugust 21, 2017.
  13. ^"RabbitEars TV Query for WWPX".Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2014.
  14. ^"DTV Tentative Channel Designation for the First and the Second Rounds"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 29, 2013. RetrievedMarch 24, 2012.

External links

[edit]
Full power
Low-power
Outlying areas
  • WWPB 31
    • PBS/Maryland Public Television, Hagerstown, MD
  • WMDE 36
    • Shop LC, Dover, DE
  • WWPX-TV 60
    • Ion Television, Martinsburg, WV
Defunct
  • 1 Nominally a low-power station; shares spectrum with full-power WRC-TV.
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  • ** Owned by a third party and operated by Scripps through operating agreements.
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